Fields of gold : ǂb designing the Golden State with the California poppy, 1880-1930

Date
2023
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Delaware
Abstract
This thesis project explores the influence of the iconic California poppy on the visual and material culture of the Golden State between 1880-1930, in order to understand how and why a poppy-centric image of the burgeoning state emerged at the turn of the century. By studying how self-taught and professional makers translated the poppies of the landscape into wood, silver, clay, thread, paper, and paint, and how California residents subsequently interacted with the living and artificial poppy, I complicate how we have come to understand California as a place, state, idea, and aesthetic. In part a cultural and environmental history of the California poppy, this project investigates the inherent tension between the poppy’s symbolic deployment as a vehicle for cultural and economic growth in California and the human-driven environmental changes originating in the nineteenth century that have led to its demise. In this paper, I focus on four conceptual issues: state identity formation, “native” identities, living things, and artificial things. These concepts, although seemingly at odds with each other, were bound together by the California poppy in the formation of a California state identity at the turn of the twentieth century.
Description
Keywords
California, California poppy, Decorative arts, Ecocriticism
Citation